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Author Topic: Gulf Oil spill - maps  (Read 16292 times)
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Bobbie Ireland
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« Reply #30 on: 10-May-10, 07:55:00 AM »

Media helicopters force Gulf birds to abandon nests

Come ON, people!!! I swear, you would have to wonder...
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Bird Crazy
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« Reply #31 on: 10-May-10, 10:09:19 PM »

no you don't have to wonder, just read the stuff they publish as news most of them are ignorant morons.  stupid
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Donna
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« Reply #32 on: 10-May-10, 11:07:07 PM »

no you don't have to wonder, just read the stuff they publish as news most of them are ignorant morons.  stupid

 clap thumbsup 2thumbsup  so true!
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Donna
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« Reply #33 on: 12-May-10, 07:21:21 AM »

Black whitecaps and birds that scream Exxon Valdez.

Up to now, the oil spill in the Gulf -- with the exception of photos of discolored water -- has been mostly abstract. With the disaster finally making itself seen, however, expect the visual media to assume a much larger role now, with a corresponding gut punch to the American public and the political powers that be.




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Efforts to rescue wildlife continue as concerns intensify about the impact of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill on the Gulf Coast's ecosystem. A team of eight specialists from the International Bird Rescue Research Center is combing the outer-islands of the Mississippi Delta in Louisiana today after four days of bad weather hampered efforts.
"Now we have a window of time and we are going to try to get out there and catch up," Jay Holcomb, executive director at IBRRC, tells  Green House.

"It really has the potential to affect the food chain," he says. "How bad it will be, I cannot even estimate, because it is impossible to do that."

Two seabirds-- a pelican and gannet-- are in good condition after being rescued by IBRRC and Tri-State Bird Rescue Research. The organizations set up three rehabilitation facilities in Alabama, Mississippi and Florida.

Few animal casualties have been reported, but the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration told the New York Times that its planes spotted dolphins and turtles in areas covered by oil.

    Biologists are increasingly alarmed for wildlife offshore, where the damage from the spill can be invisible but still deadly. And they caution that because of the fluidity between onshore and offshore marine communities, the harm taking place deep at sea will come back to haunt the shallows, whether or not they are directly hit by the slick

Up to 20 National Wildlife Refuges could be affected by the oil spill, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service . Responders are preparing to conduct a controlled burn today with no anticipated impacts on marine mammals and sea turtles, according to the Deepwater Horizon Incident Joint Information Center.

Procter & Gamble sent 1,000 bottles of Dawn dish washing soap to the Gulf of Mexico area to help clean wildlife, the Associated Press reported. The company is also providing updates on efforts via Facebook.

http://www.cnn.com/video/?/video/us/2010/05/05/am.mattingly.oil.wildlife.cnn video: so horrific. Why didn't they rescue that Sea Turtle??? In my opinion, if they are so concerned about Wildlife, they could have rescued it.  Sad
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Donna
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« Reply #34 on: 13-May-10, 08:14:24 PM »

"Many groups are soliciting funds to help oiled wildlife in the Gulf. WATCH OUT! The only group working this spill is Tri-State Bird Rescue and Research. They are being paid by BP! Others claiming to be caring for oiled wildlife are either not telling the truth, or doing something other than removing crude oil from ...feathers! Watch out for predatory fundraisers capitalizing on your compassion!"
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DebInTexas
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« Reply #35 on: 13-May-10, 09:30:58 PM »

My neighbor is in Louisiana, helping to put out boom lines, plotting where to put them and such (he's some kind of crew chief).  Anyway, he told his wife this week about the news helicopter buzzing the island where a bunch of Brown Pelicans were nesting.  The birds scattered, and then the seagulls moved in to snatch the eggs.  Wildlife, fish, and plants are going to have a hard enough time surviving the oil - they don't need the added disturbances from news slugs.

Debbie in Texas
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Donna
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« Reply #36 on: 13-May-10, 10:40:47 PM »

My neighbor is in Louisiana, helping to put out boom lines, plotting where to put them and such (he's some kind of crew chief).  Anyway, he told his wife this week about the news helicopter buzzing the island where a bunch of Brown Pelicans were nesting.  The birds scattered, and then the seagulls moved in to snatch the eggs.  Wildlife, fish, and plants are going to have a hard enough time surviving the oil - they don't need the added disturbances from news slugs.

Debbie in Texas

Yes, I posted an article about that the other day:

Media helicopters force Gulf birds to abandon nests

Birds in the Gulf of Mexico have a new enemy: the press. Media aircraft have been conducting illegal flights and disturbing birds over Breton National Wildlife Refuge, an Important Bird Area off the east coast of Louisiana where oil from the leaking BP wellhead has been washing ashore.

 clap for your neighbor!  I know they are asking for hair clippings from Beauty parlors to fill the booms. So far, 50 states and Canada have donated all their clippings to help out. They say the booms are made of a mesh and they can use hair to fill them as hair absorbs oils. So why not.
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« Reply #37 on: 15-May-10, 06:24:09 AM »

An oily brown pelican has been found on a bayou two hours south of New Orleans, officials said Friday.

The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries found an oily pelican on the rocks Thursday at Sand Dollar Marina on Grand Isle. The brown pelican is Louisiana’s state bird and was removed from the endangered species list in November of 2009.
Twenty birds have been brought to Fort Jackson for rehabilitation since the beginning of the spill. Five had been in oil and needed treatment, and two have been released. One was released this morning after being washed and held in an outdoor cage as it was rehabilitated. The bird grew from 6.3 ounces to 7.8 ounces as it was being held.

Also on Thursday, shoreline cleanup assessment teams found large tar balls, up to 8 inches in diameter, along Fourchon beach in Southern Louisiana. Tar balls were also found on the banks of Belle Pass and Elmer’s Island. Authorities are also testing tar balls found along barrier islands in Mississippi but have not yet confirmed that they are from the spill.
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« Reply #38 on: 16-May-10, 08:47:03 AM »

A German biologist says that efforts to clean oil-drenched birds in the Gulf of Mexico are in vain. For the birds' sake, it would be faster and less painful if animal-rescue workers put them under, she says. Studies and other experts back her up.

"Kill, don't clean," is the recommendation of a German animal biologist, who this week said that massive efforts to clean oil-soaked birds in Gulf of Mexico won't do much to stop a near certain and painful death for the creatures.

Despite the short-term success in cleaning the birds and releasing them back into the wild, few, if any, have a chance of surviving, says Silvia Gaus, a biologist at the Wattenmeer National Park along the North Sea in the German state of Schleswig-Holstein.

"According to serious studies, the middle-term survival rate of oil-soaked birds is under 1 percent," Gaus says. "We, therefore, oppose cleaning birds."

The oil spill -- which continues to pump more than 200,000 gallons (755,000 liters) of crude into the Gulf each day -- was caused by an April 20 explosion on a BP-operated oil rig about 50 miles off the Louisiana coast.

In the path of the spill are several large protected areas for wildlife, including a vital nesting area for thousands of brown pelicans which were only removed from the US Endangered Species Program last year. Louisiana's Breton National Wildlife Refuge is by itself home to 34,000 birds. So far, the vast oil slick has yet to make significant landfall, limiting the numbers of birds affected, but observers worry that it is only a matter of time before beaches along America's Gulf Coast become blackened.

Birds Will Eventually Perish from Long-Term Causes

Catching and cleaning oil-soaked birds oftentimes leads to fatal amounts of stress for the animals, Gaus says. Furthermore, forcing the birds to ingest coal solutions -- or Pepto Bismol, as animal-rescue workers are doing along the Gulf Coast -- in an attempt to prevent the poisonous effects of the oil is ineffective, Gaus says. The birds will eventually perish anyway from kidney and liver damage.

Gaus speaks from 20 years of experience, and she worked on the environmental cleanup of the Pallas -- a wood-carrying cargo ship that spilled 90 tons of oil in the North Sea after running aground in October of 1998. Around 13,000 birds drown, froze or expired due to stress as a result of the Pallas spill.

Once covered in oil, a bird will use its bill and tongue to remove the toxic substance from their feathers. Despite oil's terrible taste and smell, a bird will still try and clean itself because it can't live without fluffy feathers that repel water and regulate its body temperature. "Their instinct to clean is greater than their instinct to hunt, and as long as their feathers are dirty with oil, they won't eat," Gaus says.

Kill Them 'Quickly and Painlessly'

But it's the instinct of biologists, who often feel compelled to save the birds out of duty and ethical reasons, that will ultimately lead a bird to a worse death, say some. It would be better to let the birds die in peace, Gaus says, or kill them "quickly and painlessly."

Even dyed-in-the-wool preservationists from the WWF agree with Gaus. At the time of the 2002 Prestige oil spill off the coast of Spain, a spokesman from the organization said: "Birds, those that have been covered in oil and can still be caught, can no longer be helped. … Therefore, the World Wildlife Fund is very reluctant to recommend cleaning."

The Prestige spill killed 250,000 birds. Of the thousands that were cleaned, most died within a few days, and only 600 lived and were able to be released into the wild. According to a British study of the spill, the median lifespan of a bird that was cleaned and released was only seven days.

http://www.spiegel.de/fotostrecke
/fotostrecke-54615.html
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